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Oct. 28, 2024
by Robert McGarvey
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I was looking at the trio of wall-mounted dispensers in my hotels shower truth is I was trying to decipher which was body soap but the typeface was too small and eventually I conceded and went out to the bedroom to retrieve my reading glasses.
And then a memory popped up. I recalled a conversation I had with a onetime client, maybe 15 years ago, and he was telling me his company, which managed dozens of hotels, reaped a huge advantage against stand alone properties because of its bulk buying of staples such as soaps, toilet paper, coffee, towels, the stuff hotels use in mass quantities.
Nothing special in that and then he said something that really caught my attention: Of course I dont use the in-room soaps. I bring my own.
This was after TSA had decreed we travel only with miniature bottles and therefore he carefully poured his preferred shampoo, conditioner, body soap into little bottles before a trip.
Turns out he may have known something important long before I tumbled to it.
It was about that same time when big hotel groups began the phase out of individual mini bars of soap and tiny bottles of shampoo. I remember them telling me this was good for the environment. Dont forget they said that.
They didnt say this but the shift to giant bottles could also save a few pennies of a housekeepers time because those big dispensers need less attention.
By about five years ago, the transition was over. Big jugs had won.
That victory became all the plainer in when California passed a law prohibiting big hotels from using little toiletry bottles. The flashpoint was a desire to decrease plastic waste, so out went single use tiny bottles.
Should you in fact use the big bottles in the shower?
Maybe not.
The hotel managers leading the conversion didnt say those big jugs can spawn all manner of nastiness, which a onetime hotel manager took to TikTok to warn about. She said she had seen bodily fluids in refillable shampoo and conditioner bottles and advised never to use them.
She added: Ive seen Nair and god knows what else in there.
This should come as no real surprise. One reason the capsule coffee machines have become standard issue in hotel rooms is that too many of us were using old fashioned Mr Coffee type carafes to make ramen, wash underwear, and who knows what else. Personally I wont use those carafes that still show up in some hotels even tho I am a big coffee drinker and I have developed a real fondness for hotels with giant coffee urns in the lobby.
With competitive price and timely delivery, WENESY sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.
If guests can use coffee makers to clean their socks, why wouldnt I expect some would use in-room bulk toiletry dispensers for mischievous purposes?
Hotels arent ignorant about such worries. Many now boast that they use tamper proof containers and probably that will become the norm, just as tamper proof bottles rule the racks in our drug stores.
But removing that worry doesnt necessarily deliver the win for the big containers.
Thats because theres also an environmental argument against those bulk dispensers. Remember, this shift was purportedly fueled by environmental concerns of big hotel operators. That may be utter malarkey however. Per the Washington Post, the greenest option is an old-school bar of soap made from plant oil or animal fat and lye, without many extra ingredients. Simple bar soap cuts greenhouse emissions by about a third compared with liquid soap, according to a study from the Institute of Environmental Engineering at the Swiss university ETH Zurich.
Perhaps more curiously, research shows that many of us use more of the stuff thats in those big bottles than we do with smaller bottles. Most of the studies show that people believe the product is less efficacious, meaning it doesnt work as well, when they share it with strangers rather than friends, UC Riverside marketing professor Thomas Kramer said. Then, in some studies, it shows that it actually leads to them using more to make up for that perceived low efficacy.
Its in a big bottle and so we think its cheap (which probably it is) and, therefore, we use more of it to compensate for its inferiority. Multiply those greenhouse emissions.
Bottomline: my hotel executive/client was right. Bring your own toiletries. Ignore the giant dispenser on the shower walls and, whatever you do, dont ever use an in-room coffee care except to wash underwear.
The Sanitary Benefits of Touchless Soap Dispensers
Most traditional soap dispensers feature a pump or lever mechanism that requires manual operation for proper use. For commercial restrooms that see high volumes of visitors per day, this repeated touching of the dispenser units can create a significantly unhygienic environment thanks to cross-contamination. As more bathroom patrons touch these devices, they leave behind bacteria, viruses, and other harmful contaminants. A future visitor may come in contact with these hazardous organisms, spreading illness to themselves and others throughout the building. Ultimately, touchless soap dispensers-along with other automatic restroom fixtures-create a more sanitary space for guests
Traditional soap dispensers are, simply put, too messy. While an automatic commercial soap dispenser provides pre-programmed product quantities, manual units are unpredictable. An over-eager restroom patron may pump an excessive amount of soap, leaving behind run-off products for your custodial staff to clean up later. With a touchless device, visitors are limited to an appropriate, controllable amount of soap, ensuring less labor by streamlining maintenance for your janitors. It also promotes a more hygienic environment in periods between scheduled cleanings.
One non-sanitary benefit associated with touchless soap dispensers is the cost-effectiveness of controlled supply consumption. As mentioned before, these devices dispense pre-programmed amounts of soap. They're also extremely convenient, encouraging more bathroom patrons to properly wash their hands before leaving. Limiting dispensed soap quantities per visitor makes units more likely to remain filled and ready for use, further enhancing the bathroom's hygiene quality. Ultimately, this reduced soap consumption indirectly becomes smarter consumption as patrons practice improved hygiene without wasting your restroom's resources.
Want more information on hotel soap dispensers? Feel free to contact us.
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